The recent peaceful power transition in Malawi following the unanticipated death of the country's president, Bingu wa Mutharika, marked a significant landmark in the country's fragile democracy and an important lesson for Africa. As one of the last countries in southern Africa to undergo political democratisation, Malawi's political culture remained embedded in the norm of patronage whereby ‘good’ and ‘decisive’ leadership is aligned with the centralisation and personalisation of power. Indeed the circumstances leading up to Mrs Joyce Banda's ascension to power demonstrate a notable level of democratic maturation; democratic consolidation in the country has not been entirely realised. The recurring conflict between ambition and upholding the constitution, displayed in the post transition phase by the executive at the cost of good governance, state functionality and sustainable social development, forces one to question the widely celebrated new leadership. Without rendering...
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